Khaleej Times

May forces her deputy to quit over porn

- Reuters

london — British Prime Minister Theresa May forced her most senior minister, Damian Green, to resign for lying about whether he knew pornograph­y had been found on computers in his parliament­ary office. The resignatio­n of one of May’s closest political allies, who had helped pacify her deeply divided party, is a blow.

Green’s future was thrust into doubt when the Sunday Times newspaper reported last month that police in 2008 had found pornograph­y on his office computers in the Houses of Parliament. —

london — British Prime Minister Theresa May forced her most senior minister, Damian Green, to resign after an internal investigat­ion found he had made misleading comments about pornograph­y on computers in his parliament­ary office.

The resignatio­n of one of May’s most trusted allies, who had helped pacify her deeply divided party, is a blow as she navigates the final year of tortuous negotiatio­ns towards Britain’s exit from the European Union in March 2019.

Green, who voted to stay in the EU, was appointed as first secretary of state just six months ago in a bid to shore up May’s premiershi­p following her disastrous bet on a June snap election that lost her party its majority in parliament. But Green’s future was thrust into doubt when the Sunday Times newspaper reported

i regret that i’ve been asked to resign from the government following breaches of the ministeria­l code, for which i apologise Damian Green, senior minister

last month that police in 2008 had found pornograph­y on his office computers in the Houses of Parliament. In response, Green said the story was untrue.

A review, requested by May and conducted by a senior government official, concluded that Green’s statements which suggested he was not aware that indecent material had been found on the computers, were “inaccurate and misleading.”

The inquiry, a summary of which was distribute­d by May’s Downing Street office, found he had breached rules governing the behaviour of ministers.

“I regret that I’ve been asked to resign from the government following breaches of the Ministeria­l Code, for which I apologise,” Green said in a letter to May, who said she had accepted his resignatio­n with deep regret. Green, 61, said he did not download or view pornograph­y on his parliament­ary computers. He added that he should have been clearer about his statements after the story broke.

He is the most senior British politician to fall since a debate about a culture of abuse by some powerful men at the heart of Westminste­r was triggered by the Harvey Weinstein sexual harassment scandal.

May’s defence minister, Michael Fallon, quit last month for unspecifie­d conduct which he said had fallen below required standards. — Reuters

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